As she came close to him, Conan grabbed a slim, belled ankle. With a squeal she toppled to the cushions and lay staring at him over her veil with wide eyes. For long moments there was no sound but the music and her agitated breathing.
"Please, master," she whispered finally. "My mistress asks that her serving women-"
"Am I your master then?" Conan asked. Idly he ran a finger from slender calf to rounded thigh, and she shivered. "What if I send for Punjar, saying you have not pleased me? What if I demand he switch you here and now?"
"Then I ... I would be switched, master," she whispered and swallowed hard.
Conan shook his head. "Truly, Vendhyans are mad. Would you really go so far to hide the truth from me?" Before she could flinch away, he s.n.a.t.c.hed the veil from her face.
For an instant Vyndra stared up at him, scarlet suffusing her cheeks.
Then her eyes snapped shut, and frantically she tried to cover herself with her arms.
"It did not work with Kang Hou," Conan laughed, "and it does not work with me." Her blush deepened and her eyes squeezed tighter. "This time your playing at games has gone awry," he said, leaning over her. "One chance, and one chance only, will I give you to run and then I will show you what men and women do who do not play games."
The crimson did not leave her cheeks, but her eyes opened just enough for her to look at him through long lashes. "You fool," she murmured.
"I could have run from you any day since my hands were unbound."
Throwing her arms about his neck, she pulled him down to her.
Chapter XIX.
As shadows lengthened with the sinking sun, Conan left Vyndra sleeping on the cushions and went in search of more wine. "Immediately, master,"
a servant said in response to his request, adding at his next question, "No, master, the two men have not yet returned from the city. I know nothing of the Khitan woman, master."
Finding a chamber with tall, arched windows looking to the west, Conan sat with his foot on the windowsill and his back against its frame. The sun, violent red in a purpling sky, hung its own diameter above the towering trees in the distance. It was a grim sight, fit for his mood.
The day had been useless. Waiting in the palace, even making love to Vyndra, however enjoyable, now seemed time wasted. At least in following the caravan this far there had been the illusion of doing something about the poison in his veins, of hunting down the men whose deaths he must see to before his own. One of those men, at least, was in the city, not a league distant, and here he sat, waiting.
"Patil?"
At the soft female voice, he looked around. An unveiled Vendhyan woman stood in the doorway of the chamber, her plain robes of cotton neither those of a servant nor of a n.o.ble.
"You do not recognize me," she said with a smile, and abruptly he did.
"Kuie Hsi," he gasped. "I did not believe you could so completely-"
Impatiently he put all that aside. "What did you learn?"
"Much, and little. The caravan remained in the city only hours, for the merchants" markets are in Ayodhya and the n.o.bles are impatient to reach the court. Karim Singh, however," she added as he leaped to his feet, "is yet in Gwandiakan, though I could not learn where."
"He will not escape me," Conan growled. "Nor this Naipal, wizard though he be. But why does the wazam remain here rather than going on to the court?"
"Perhaps because, according to rumor, Naipal has been in Gwandiakan for two days. As his face is known to few, however, this cannot be confirmed."
Conan"s fist smacked into his palm. "Crom, but this cannot be other than fate. Both of them within my grasp. I will finish it this night."
The Khitan woman caught his arm as he started from the chamber. "If you mean to enter Gwandiakan, take care, for the city is uneasy. Soldiers have been arresting the children of the streets, all of the homeless urchins and beggar children, supposedly on the orders of the wazam.
Many are angered, and the poorer sections of the city need but a spark to burst into flame. The streets of Gwandiakan could run with blood over this."
"I have seen blood before," he said grimly, and then he was striding down the tapestried corridors. "Punjar! My horse!"
But half-awake, Vyndra stretched on the cushions, noting lazily that the lamps had been lit and night was come. Abruptly she frowned.
Someone had laid a silken coverlet over her. With a gasp she clutched the covering to her at the sight of Chin Kou. The Khitan woman"s arms were filled with folds of many-colored silk.
"I brought garments," Chin Kou said.
Vyndra pulled the coverlet up about her neck. "And what made you think I would need clothing?" she demanded haughtily.
"I am sorry," Chin Kou said, turning to leave. "No doubt when you wish to cover yourself, you will summon servants. I will leave you the coverlet since you seem to desire that."
"Wait!" Blushing, Vyndra fingered the coverlet. "I did not know. As you have brought the garments, you might as well leave them."
Chin Kou arched an eyebrow. "There is no need to take such a tone with me. I know very well what you were doing with the cheng-li who calls himself Patil." Vyndra groaned, the scarlet in her cheeks deepening.
After a moment the merchant"s daughter took pity. "I was doing the same thing with the cheng-li who calls himself Hasan. Now I know your secret and you know mine. You fear only shame before your servants. My uncle"s switch produces a much greater smarting than mere shame."
Vyndra stared at the other woman as though seeing her for the first time. It was not that she had been unaware of Chin Kou, but the Khitan was a merchant"s niece and surely merchants" nieces did not think and feel in the same way as a woman born of the Kshatriya blood. Or did they? "Do you love him?" she asked. "Hasan, I mean?"
"Yes," Chin Kou said emphatically, "though I do not know if he returns my feelings. Do you love the man called Patil?"
Vyndra shook her head. "As well love a tiger. But," she added with a mischievousness she could not control, "to be made love to by a tiger is a very fine thing."
"Hasan," Chin Kou said gravely, "is also very vigorous."
Suddenly the two women were giggling, and the giggles became deep-throated laughter.
"Thank you for the clothing," Vyndra said when she could talk again.
Tossing aside the coverlet, she rose. Chin Kou aided her in dressing, though she did not ask it, and once she was garbed, she said, "Come. We will have wine and talk of men and tigers and other strange beasts."
As the Khitan woman opened her mouth to reply, a shrill scream echoed through the palace, followed by the shouts of men and the clang of steel on steel.
Chin Kou clutched at Vyndra"s arm. "We must hide."
"Hide!" Vyndra exclaimed. "This is my palace and I will not cower in it like a rabbit."
"Foolish pride speaks," the smaller woman said. "Think what kind of bandits would attack a palace! Do you think your n.o.ble blood will protect you?"
"Yes. And you also. Even brigands will know that a ransom will be paid, for you and your sister as well, once they know who I am."
"Know who you are?" came a voice from the doorway, and Vyndra jumped in spite of herself.
"Kandar," she breathed. Pride said to stand her ground defiantly, but she could not stop herself from backing away as the cruel-eyed prince swaggered into the chamber, a b.l.o.o.d.y sword in his fist. In the corridor behind him were turban-helmed soldiers, also with crimson-stained weapons.
He stooped to take something from the floor-the veil she had worn while dancing-and fingered it thoughtfully as he advanced. "Perhaps you think you are a n.o.ble-woman," he said, "perhaps even the famous Lady Vyndra, known for the brilliance of her wit and the dazzling gatherings at her palaces? Alas, the tale has been well told already of how the Lady Vyndra fell prey beyond the Himelias to a savage barbarian who carried her off, to death perhaps, or slavery."
"What can you possibly hope to gain by this farce?" Vyndra demanded, but the words faded as six veiled women, swathed in concealing layers of silk, entered the room. And with them was Prytanis.
Smirking, the Nemedian leaned against the wall with his arms crossed.
"The G.o.ds are good, wench," he said, "for who should I find in Gwandiakan but Prince Kandar, who was interested to learn of the presence of a certain woman nearby. A purse of gold he offered for the nameless jade, and I could only accept his generosity."